United Transportation Union Lodge Number 550 v. Rock Brief in Opposition to Certiorari

Public Court Documents
October 2, 1972

United Transportation Union Lodge Number 550 v. Rock Brief in Opposition to Certiorari preview

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Cite this item

  • Brief Collection, LDF Court Filings. County of Los Angeles v. Van Davis Brief Amicus Curiae, 1978. 8b24ebaf-bb9a-ee11-be36-6045bdeb8873. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/59133879-3b70-4b12-b3d3-b58934781802/county-of-los-angeles-v-van-davis-brief-amicus-curiae. Accessed April 29, 2025.

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    I n  T H E

Olmtrt of %  lotted States
October Teem, 1978 

No. 77-1553

County o e  Los A ngeles, et al.,

Petitioners,

v.

V an Davis, et al.

OH W R IT  OE CERTIORARI TO T H E  U N IT E D  STATES 

COURT OP APPEALS FOR T H E  N IN T H  C IR C U IT

BRIEF AMICUS CURIAE FOR THE 
N.A.A.C.P. LEGAL DEFENSE AND 

EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC.

Jack Greenberg 
0 . Peter Sherwood 
E ric Schnapper 

Suite 2030 
10 Columbus Circle 
New York, New York 10019

Counsel for Amicus



1

I N D E X

PAGE

In t e r e s t  o f  Amicus ................................................  1

Summary o f  Argument ..............................................  2

ARGUMENT .......................................................................  3
I .  THE "RACIAL QUOTA HIRING 
ORDER" HAS NOT IN FACT BEEN 
APPLIED TO PETITIONERS AND QUESTION 
TWO IS THUS NOT ACTUALLY PRESENTED 
BY THIS CASE ................................................  3

I I .  PETITIONERS' HIRING PRACTICES 
PERPETUATED THE EFFECT OF PAST 
DISCRIMINATION IN VIOLATION OF 
42 U.S.C. §1981 ............................................  9

CONCLUSION .....................................................................  38



1 1

TABLE OF AUTHORITIES

Cases

Alexander v.  Gardner-Denver C o . ,
415 U.S. 36 (1974) ......................................... 13

Alexander v .  Holmes County Board o f
Education,  396 U.S. 19 (1969)  ................... 35

Brown v.  Board o f  Education,  347
U.S. 483 (1954)  ...................................................  3 1 ,3 3 ,3 4 ,3 5

Crawford v.  Board o f  Education,  17 Cal.
R ptr . 389 (1976) ................................................. 34

DeFunis v .  Odegaard, 416 U.S 312 (1972) . . . .  7

Ex parte  McCardle,  7 Wall .  506.
(1869)  ......................    20

F le t c h e r  v.  Peck, 6 Cranch 87 ( 1 8 1 0 ) ................. 20

Gaston County v .  United S ta tes ,
395 U.S. 285 ( 1969) .......................................... 3 ,3 0 ,  31

Golden v.  Z w ick ler ,  394 U.S. 104
(1969)  .......................................................................  8

Green v.  School  Board o f  New 
Kent County, 391 U.S.
430 (1968) ................................   29

Griggs v.  Duke Power C o . ,  401 U.S.
158 (1971) .............................................. ...............  9

Guey Heung Lee v.  Johnson, 404 U.S.
1215 (1971) . . . . . . . ....... ...............................

PAGE

34



1 X 1

Hall v.  Beals ,  396 U.S. 45 (1969)   ............ 7 ,8

Hurd v.  Hodge, 334 U.S. 24 (1948) ..................... 11

Jones v .  A l f re d  H. Mayer Co . ,
392 U.S 409 (1968)  ............................................ 10,15

Kelsey v.  Weinberger, 498 F.2d 701
(D.D.Cir .  1974) ................................................... 34

Keyes v .  School  D i s t r i c t  No. 1,
413 U.S. 189 (1973) .........................................  30

Lane v.  Wilson,  307 U.S 265 (1939)  ..................  30

McDonald v.  Santa Fe Transporta t ion
Co. , 427 U.S 273 ( 1976) ................................  14

Monell v.  Department o f  S o c i a l
S e r v i c e s ,  56 L.Ed.2d 611 (1978)  ................ 12

Moose Lodge No. 107 v.  I r v i s ,  407
U.S 163 (1972) .....................................................  30

New York v.  United S ta te s ,  419 U.S 888
(1974)  .......................................................................  36

Palmer v. Thompson, 403 U.S. 217 (1971)  . . . .  21

Regents o f  U n iv e r s i ty  o f  C a l i f o r n i a  
v.  Bakke, 57 L.Ed.2d 750
(1978)  .......................................................................  12,32

Reyes v .  Matthews, 428 F.Supp. 300
(D.D.C. 1976) .......................................................  12

Runyon v.  McGrary, 427 U.S 160
(1976)  .......................................................................  10,13

Swann v.  Char lotte-Mecklenburg
Board o f  Education,  402 U.S.
1 (1971)

PAGE

29



Washington v.  Davis ,  426 U.S. 229
(1976)  ..................................... .................................. 21

Statutes

31 U.S.C. §1242(a) ..................... ........................... 12

42 U.S.C. §1981 ..............................................................  passim

42 U.S.C. §1983 .............. ...............................................  12

42 U.S.C. §2000e ............................................................  13

C i v i l  Rights Act o f  1866 ..................................... passim

C i v i l  Rights Act o f  1964 .........................................  9,12

14 Sta t .  27 .......................................................................  10, .14

14 Sta t .  177 . ................................................... ........... . . 14

1860 Cal .  S ta ts ,  c .329  ................................................ 32

1863 Cal .  S ta ts ,  c .  159 ......................................... .. 32

1885 Cal .  S ta ts ,  c .  117 ................................................  33

1893 Cal . S ta ts ,  c .  193 ................................................  33

1921 Cal .  S ta ts ,  c .685  .............................. .................. 33

General School  Law o f  C a l i f o r n i a
§1662 (1880)  .............................................. ........... 32

iv  -

PAGE



V PAGE

L e g i s l a t i v e  M ate r ia ls

118 Cong. R e c .....................................................................  13

110 Cong. Rec .....................................................................  13

Cong. Globe,  40th Cong. ,  2d S e s s .........................  11

Cong. Globe,  39th Cong. ,  1st S e s s .......................  10 ,15-27 ,
31 ,32 ,3 7

Governmental Reports

C a l i f o r n i a  L e g i s l a t i v e  Assembly
Permanent Subcommittee on Post
Secondary Education,  Unequal
Access to C o l lege  (1975)  .............................  35

j
Governor 's  Comxnissionon the Los Angeles 

R i o t s ,  V io le n c e  in the City 
(1965)  .......................................................................  34

United States Bureau o f  the Census,
1970 Census o f  Populat ion ,
Ser ies  PC(2)~2A, State o f
Birth .........................................................................  35

United States Commission on C i v i l  
Rights ,  Mexican-American
Education Study (1971-74)  ............................... 35

Other A u t h o r i t i e s

22 C a l i f o r n i a  Department o f  J u s t i c e ,
Opinions o f  the Attorney  General ,
Opinion 6735a (1920)  ..........................................  33



IN THE
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES 

October Term, 1978

No. 77-1553

COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES, et  a l . ,

P e t i t  i o n e r s ,

v .

VAN DAVIS, et  a l .

On Writ o f  C e r t i o r a r i  to the United 
States Court o f  Appeals f o r  the 

Ninth C i r c u i t

BRIEF AMICUS CURIAE FOR THE 
N.A.A.C.P.  LEGAL DEFENSE AND 

EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC.

INTEREST OF AMICUS

The N.A.A.C.P.  Legal  Defense and Educational  

Fund, I n c . ,  i s  a n o n - p r o f i t  c o r p o r a t i o n  e s t a b ­

l i s h e d  under the laws o f  the State o f  New York. 

I t  was formed to  a s s i s t  Negroes to secure  th e i r  

c o n s t i t u t i o n a l  r i g h t s  by the  p r o s e c u t i o n  o f  

l a w su i t s .  I t s  c h ar te r  d e c la r e s  that i t s  purposes



2

inc lu de  render ing  l e g a l  s e r v i c e s  g r a t u i t o u s l y  to 

Negroes s u f f e r i n g  i n j u s t i c e  by reason o f  r a c i a l  

d i s c r i m i n a t i o n .  For many years at torn eys  o f  the 

Legal  Defense Fund have represente d  p a r t i e s  in 

employment d i s c r i m i n a t i o n  l i t i g a t i o n  b e f o r e  th is  

Court and the lower c o u r t s .  The Legal  Defense 

Fund b e l i e v e s  that i t s  exper ien ce  in  employment 

d i s c r i m i n a t i o n  l i t i g a t i o n  may be o f  a s s i s t a n c e  to  
the C o u rt .—

SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT

The " r a c i a l  quota h i r i n g  o r d e r "  that  i s  the 

s u b je c t  o f  Question 2 has never been implemented 

as such. Instead  the p e t i t i o n e r s ,  in  compliance 

w i t h  an u n c h a l l e n g e d  p o r t i o n  o f  the  d i s t r i c t  

c o u r t ' s  i n ju n c t i o n ,  have d e l i b e r a t e l y  interv iewed 

la rge  numbers o f  m in or i ty  a p p l i c a n t s .  But the 

a c t u a l  r a t i n g  and h i r i n g  d e c i s i o n s  are  made 

without regard to  r a c e .  Because t h i s  a f f i r m a t iv e  

a c t i o n  in  i n t e r v i e w i n g  c o n s i s t e n t l y  r e s u l t s

!_/ L e t t e r s  o f  c o n s e n t  t o  the  f i l i n g  o f  t h i s  
b r i e f  have been f i l e d  with the Clerk.



-  3 -

in  the  h i r i n g  b l a c k s  and M e x i c a n - A m e r i c a n s  in  

numbers g r e a t e r  than  the  " r a c i a l  q u o t a  h i r i n g  

o r d e r " ,  that order  has never been, and is  u n l ik e l y  
to become, o p e r a t i v e .

The 1866 C i v i l  Rights Act f o r b i d s  r a c i a l l y  

n e u t r a l  p r a c t i c e s  which  p e r p e t u a t e  the  e f f e c t  

o f  past d i s c r i m i n a t i o n .  The re le van t  p r o v i s i o n s  

o f  the Black Codes, which the C i v i l  Rights Act was 

i n t e n d e d  to  a n n u l ,  were g e n e r a l l y  n e u t r a l  on 

t h e i r  f a c e ,  and pena l i zed  newly f reed  s laves  by 

perpetu ating  past d i s c r i m i n a t i o n .  P e t i t i o n e r s '  

w r i t t e n  examinations perpetuate  the e f f e c t s  o f  

wide spread de. ju r e  d i s c r i m i n a t i o n  in the C a l i f o r ­

n ia  s c h o o l s .  Gaston County v .  United S t a t e s , 395 
U.S 285 (1969 ) .

ARGUMENT

1 • THE "RACIAL QUOTA HIRING ORDER" HAS 
NOT IN FACT BEEN APPLIED~TO PETITIONERS, AND 
QUESTION TWO IS THUS NOT ACTUALLY PRESENTED BY 
THIS CASE~ ~ ~ ~  “

The second Question Presented conta ined in 

the p e t i t i o n  r e l a t e s  t o  w h e th e r  the  d i s t r i c t  

court  erred in  imposing "a r a c i a l  quota h i r i n g  

o r d e r . "  P e t i t i o n e r s '  s t a t e m e n t  o f  the  c a se  
r e c i t e s  that a f t e r  f in d in g  l i a b i l i t y ,



-  4

[ a ] s  a remedy, the [ d i s t r i c t ]  court  ordered 
that  the County h i r e  a l l  fu tu re  entry  l e v e l  
f iremen in accordance with a h i r i n g  quota o f  
20% b lack  and 20% Mexican-American u n t i l  such 
t ime as the  p e r c e n t a g e  r e p r e s e n t a t i o n  o f  
those m i n o r i t i e s  in the e n t i r e  F i re  Depart­
ment in a l l  ranks equaled t h e i r  re p r e se n t a ­
t i o n  in  the  C o u n t y ' s  g e n e r a l  p o p u l a t i o n .  
B r i e f  f o r  P e t i t i o n e r s ,  p .6 .

P e t i t i o n e r s  f u r t h e r  s t a t e  t h a t  a f t e r  1972,

[ a ] l l  subsequent h i r i n g  has been pursuant to  
the t r i a l  c o u r t ' s  40% p r e f e r e n t i a l  m in o r i ty  
h i r i n g  o r d e r  o f  J u l y ,  1973 .  B r i e f  f o r  
P e t i t i o n e r s ,  p. 9.

The c l e a r  i m p l i c a t i o n  o f  these a s s e r t i o n s  i s  that 

the quota h i r i n g  o r d e r "  was the s o l e  i n ju n c t i o n  

e n t e r e d  by the  d i s t r i c t  c o u r t ,  t h a t  i t  was an 

u n c o n d i t i o n a l  o r d e r ,  and that p e t i t i o n e r s  complied 

w i t h  t h a t  o r d e r  by e s t a b l i s h i n g  a r i g i d  q u o t a  

system, c o n s c i o u s l y  h i r i n g ,  r e g a r d le s s  o f  a b i l i t y ,

1 b lack  and 1 Mexican-American f o r  every 3 whites .  
The f a c t s  appear to  be o therw ise .

The d i s t r i c t  c o u r t ' s  d e c i s i o n  conta ins  four 

primary su bs tan t ive  requirements,  o f  which only 

the f i r s t  two are u n c o n d i t i o n a l .  Paragraph one i s  

a g e n e r a l  i n j u n c t i o n  a g a i n s t  d i s c r i m i n a t i o n .  

Paragraph two mandates in general  language that 

p e t i t  i o n e r s  take  s t e p s  to  i n c r e a s e  m i n o r i t y  

employment, but conta ins  no s p e c i f i c  d i r e c t i o n  as 
to how th is  i s  to  be done.



-  5 -

D e f e n d a n t s  s h a l l  i n  good f a i t h  make 
a l l  a f f i r m a t i v e  a c t i o n  e f f o r t s  r e a s o n a b l y  
p o s s i b l e  and n e c e s s a r y  t o  i n c r e a s e  the  
b l a c k  and M e x i c a n - A m e r i c a n  p a r t i c i p a t i o n  
r a t e s  i n  the  f i r e m a n  w o r k f o r c e  at  t h e  Los 
A n g e le s  County F i r e  Department u n t i l  such 
t i m e  as t h o s e  p a r t i c i p a t i o n  r a t e s  a r e  
commensurate w i t h  the  b l a c k  and M e x i c a n -  
Am er ican  p o p u l a t i o n  p e r c e n t a g e s  o f  Los 
Angeles County.

What i s  " r e a s o n a b l y  p o s s i b l e  and n e c e s s a r y "  
i s  l e f t  to  the  d i s c r e t i o n  o f  the  p e t i t i o n e r s ;  

paragraph two does not i t s e l f  mandate a quota or  

any form o f  r a c e - c o n s c i o u s  h i r i n g .  C e r t i o r a r i  was 

not sought as to  the p r o p r i e t y  o f  the i n ju n c t i v e  

p r o v i s i o n s  o f  paragraphs one and two. Paragraphs 

three and four s t a t e  that "a minimum o f  twenty 

percent (20%) o f  a l l  new employees . . . sh a l l  

be b l a c k s "  and Chicanos.  But paragraphs three and 

four are o b v io u s ly  o f  no o p e r a t iv e  s i g n i f i c a n c e  i f  

the a c t i o n s  taken to  comply with paragraphs one 

and two r e s u l t  in m in or i ty  h i r i n g  over the 40% 

f l o o r .  Thus paragraphs three and four are c o n t i n ­

gent in nature;  so long as compliance with para­

graphs one and two is r e s u l t i n g  in s u b s t a n t ia l  

m inor ity  h i r i n g ,  paragraphs three and four  do not 

a p p l y  and impose  no a d d i t i o n a l  o b l i g a t i o n  on 

p e t i t i o n e r s .



That i s  p r e c i s e l y  what has occurred  in th is  

case .  The h i r i n g  procedure adopted by p e t i t i o n e r s  

t o  com ply  w i t h  p a r a g r a p h s  one and two i s  as 

f o l l o w s .  To f i l l  each group o f  vacan c ies  p e t i ­

t i o n e r s  in te rv ie w  500 a p l i c a n t s  who passed t h e i r  

w r i t t e n  examination,  in c lu d in g  the h igh e s t  s c o r in g  

300 w h i tes ,  100 b lacks  and 100 Mexican-Americans. 

The number o f  whites  in terv iew ed  i s  s e v e r a l  times 

the number o f  ac tua l  v a c a n c ie s .  The in te r v ie w e r s  

ra te  each o f  these a p p l i can ts  on h i s  or  her meri ts  

w i t h o u t  r e g a r d  t o  r a c e  or  n a t i o n a l  o r i g i n .  

Th erea f ter  a p p l i c a n t s  are h i r e d  s o l e l y  on the ba s is  

o f  the  s c o r e  g i v e n  by the  i n t e r v i e w e r ,  a g a in  
without regard to  race  or  n a t i o n a l  o r i g i n .  The 

a c t u a l  h i r e s  are  n o t  from s e p a r a t e  l i s t s ,  no 

quotas are used,  and the same r a t i n g  standards are 

app l ied  to a l l  a p p l i c a n t s .  The in te rv ie w e rs  are 

no t  a u t h o r i z e d  t o  g i v e  e x t r a  p o i n t s  b e c a u s e  

o f  an a p p l i c a n t ' s  race  or  n a t i o n a l  o r i g i n ,  but are 

d i r e c t e d  on ly  to  be a l e r t  f o r  t a le n te d  m inor ity  

a p p l i c a n t s .  Th is  r a c i a l l y  n e u t r a l  p r o c e d u r e ,  

a d o p t e d  pu r s u a n t  t o  p a r a g r a p h s  one and two,  

has r e s u l t e d  in  every year s in c e  1972 in a minor­

i t y  h i r i n g  l e v e l  which c o n s i s t e n t l y ,  though by 

vary ing  amounts, exceeded 50%. Thus paragraphs 

three and four  s imply have never gone in t o  e f f e c t .



7

P e t i t i o n e r s  do not  contend that t h e i r  present 

h i r i n g  p r o c e d u r e  i s  l i k e l y  in the  f u t u r e  to  

r e s u l t  in a lower l e v e l  o f  m in o r i ty  h i r i n g ,  and 

there i s  noth ing in the record  suggest ing  that 

t h i s  w i l l  t o  o c c u r .  I n d e e d ,  at the  p r e s e n t  

rate  o f  h i r i n g ,  m in or i ty  employment at the Los 

Angeles F ire  Department i s  l i k e l y  to reach popula­

t i o n  l e v e l s  by around 1981 ,  at wh ich  t ime the  

e n t i r e  i n ju n c t i o n  w i l l  become i n o p e r a t i v e .  Nor do 
p e t i t i o n e r s  a s s e r t  t h a t ,  even  i f  th e y  sh o u ld  

p r e v a i l  on the  l i a b i l i t y  i s s u e ,  they  would 

a l t e r  t h e i r  present procedures .  Compare DeFunis 

v .  O d e g a a r d , 416 U.S .  312 ( 1 9 7 4 ) .  I t  i s  thus 

u n l ik e l y  that  an adv isory  op in ion  by th is  Court 

with regard to  the p r o p r i e t y  o f  paragraphs three 

and four would ever have any impact on the outcome 

o f  th is  l i t i g a t i o n  or the conduct o f  the p e t i ­

t i o n e r s  .

Under these c ircumstances the di sp ute  as to 

whether  the  d i s t r i c t  c o u r t  o r d e r  s h o u l d  have 

included  paragraphs three and four seems moot. 

Th is  a s p e c t  o f  " [ t ] h e  c a s e  has . . . l o s t  i t s  

ch arac ter  as a present ,  l i v e  con troversy  o f  the 

kind that must e x i s t  i f  [ the Court i s ]  to  avoid 

adv isory  op in ions  on a b s t ra c t  questi ons  o f  law."  
Hall v .  Bea ls ,  396 U.S. 45, 48 (1969 ) .  There may



-  8

be a remote p o s s i b i l i t y  that  some p e c u l i a r  turn o f  

events might render o p e r a t iv e  the d ispute d  para­

graphs p r i o r  to  t h e i r  e x p i r a t i o n  in  two or three 

y e a r s ,  " [ b ] u t  such s p e c u l a t i v e  c o n t i n g e n c i e s  

a f f o r d  no b a s is  f o r  . . . passing  on the substan­

t i v e  i s s u e s "  which  p e t i t i o n e r s  would  have the  

Court d e c id e ,  Id_. at 49. Even i f  these c ircum­

s t a n c e s  f a l l  s h o r t  o f  m o o t n e s s ,  th e y  are  v e r y  

d i f f e r e n t  than those suggested by the P e t i t i o n .  

We do not think c e r t i o r a r i  would have been granted 

had i t  been c l e a r  that the re le van ce  o f  th is  i s su e  

to  the p a r t i e s  was at best  "w hol ly  c o n j e c t u r a l . "  

G o lden  v .  Z w i c k l e r , 394 U .S .  103,  109 ( 1 9 6 9 ) .  

A c co rd in g ly  we suggest  that the grant o f  c e r t i o ­

r a r i  as t o  Q u e s t i o n  2 a p p e a r s  t o  have been 

im prov id en t .

Even i f  t h e  d i s t r i c t  c o u r t  had i s s u e d  an 

u n c o n d i t i o n a l  o r d e r  d i r e c t i n g  t h a t  f i r e m e n  be 

h i red  on the b a s is  o f  a quota,  that  r e l i e f  would 

have been j u s t i f i e d  by the  s e r i o u s  and l o n g  

standing v i o l a t i o n  o f  42 U.S.C. §1981 in vo lved  in 
t h i s  case .



-  9 -

11• PETITIONERS1 hiring  practices  perpetuated 
THE EFFECT OF PAST DISCRIMINATION IN VIOLATION OF 
42 U.S.C.  §1981.

The p a r t i e s  urge the Court to  dec ide  whether 
s e c t i o n  1981 p r o h i b i t s  n o n - jo b  r e l a t e d  employment 

c r i t e r i a  with an adverse impact on m i n o r i t i e s ,  a 

p r o h i b i t i o n  a l r e a d y  c o n t a i n e d  in  T i t l e  V I I  in  

l i g h t  o f  G r i g g s  v .  Duke Power C o . ,  401 U.S.  
158 ( 1 9 7 1 ) .  They assume th a t  t h i s  d i f f i c u l t  

i s s u e  t u r n s  on w h e th e r  s e c t i o n  1981 s h o u ld  be 

construed rn par i  materia with T i t l e  VII or with 

the Fourteenth Amendment. Amicus suggests  that 

the  G r i g g s  i s s u e  need n o t  be r e a c h e d ,  s i n c e  

s e c t i o n  1981 c l e a r l y  f o r b id s  p r a c t i c e s  which have 

the e f f e c t  o f  p e r p e t u a t i n g  p a s t  i n t e n t i o n a l  

d i s c r i m i n a t i o n ,  and the h i r i n g  p r a c t i c e s  in th is  

case had ju s t  that e f f e c t .  We fu r th er  suggest  

that quest ions  regarding  c o n s t r u c t i o n  o f  s e c t i o n  

1981 cannot,  in g e n e ra l ,  be r e s o l v e d  by simply 

seeking  to  an a lo g iz e  i t  to  e i t h e r  the Fourteenth 

Amendment or T i t l e  VII .

P e t i t i o n e r s '  a s s e r t i o n  that  Congress intended 

the s u b s t a n t i v e  r e q u i r e m e n t s  o f  s e c t i o n  1981 

t o  be the  same as t h o s e  o f  s e c t i o n  1 o f  the 

F o u r t e e n t h  Amendment i s  r e f u t e d  by the v e r y  

language and e s t a b l i s h e d  c o n s t r u c t i o n  o f  those 

p r o v i s i o n s .  In important areas the Amendment is



10

broader  than s e c t i o n  1981. The equal  p r o t e c t i o n

c lause  f o r b i d s  d i s c r i m i n a t i o n  g e n e r a l l y ;  Congress

e x p r e s s l y  c o n s i d e r e d  and r e j e c t e d  p r o p o s a l s

t o  i n c l u d e  such a p r o v i s i o n  i n  the  1866 C i v i l  
2 /R i g h t s  A c t . — The F o u r t e e n t h  Amendment a l s o  

guarantees due process  o f  law and "the  p r i v i l e g e s  

and immunities o f  c i t i z e n s  o f  the United S t a t e s , "  

but s e c t i o n  1981 conta ins  no such p r o t e c t i o n s .  On 

the o th er  hand, s e c t i o n  1981 p r o h i b i t s  d i s c r i m i n a ­

t i o n  by p r i v a t e  p a r t i e s  in a v a r i e t y  o f  s p e c i f i c  

ar eas ,  Runyon v.  McCrary, 427 U.S. 160 (1976 ) ;

Jones v .  A l f r e d  H. Mayer Co. ,  392 U.S. 409 (1968 ) ,  

but the Fourteenth Amendment does no t .  Sec t ion  

1981 was o r i g i n a l l y  enacted as part  o f  s e c t i o n  1 

o f  the  1866 C i v i l  R i g h t s  Act  t o  e n f o r c e  t h e  

Thir teenth  Amendment. Although the 1866 C i v i l  

R i g h t s  Act  was s u b s e q u e n t l y  r e e n a c t e d  i n  1870 

a f t e r  the adoption  o f  the Fourteenth Amendment, 

t h i s  was done, not to make the Fourteenth Amend­

ment the s o l e  b a s is  o f  the 1866 Act ,  but to expand

the group p r o t e c t e d  by the Act from " c i t i z e n s  o f
3/the United S t a te s "— to " a l l  persons with in  the

2 /  See Cong. Globe, 39th Cong. ,  1st S e s s . , pp . 
1266 (remarks o f  Rep. Bingham), 1366 (remarks o f  
Rep. W i lson ) .

3 /  14 Stat .  27.



11

j u r i s d i c t i o n  o f  the United S t a t e s "  in order  to

p r o t e c t  a l i e n s ,  p a r t i c u l a r l y  C h i n e s e  i n  C a l -
. f  . 4 /l f o r n i a . —

The most  i m p o r t a n t  c o n n e c t i o n  be tw een  the  

1866 C i v i l  Rights Act and the Fourteenth Amendment 

i s  that they were enacted by the same Congress 
on ly  two months apart ,  and that  one o f  the primary 

p u r p o s e s  o f  the  Amendment was t o  i n c o r p o r a t e  

c e r t a i n  o f  the g u a r a n t e e s  o f  the  Act  i n t o  the  

C o n s t i t u t i o n .  Hurd v .  H o d g e , 334 U .S .  24 ,  32 

(1948 ) .  Because both enactments "were e x press ion s  

o f  the same general  c o n g re s s i o n a l  p o l i c y , "  i d . , 

s e c t i o n  1981 s h o u ld  be c o n s t r u e d ,  as to  the  

s p e c i f i c  s u b j e c t s  to which i t  a p p l i e s ,  at l e a s t  as 

broad ly  as the Fourteenth Amendment. But s in ce  

Congress c l e a r l y  intended that  in c e r t a i n  r e s p e c t s  

the s t a t u t e  would be broader than the Fourteenth 

Amendment, l i m i t a t i o n s  as to  the s c o p e  o f  the  

Amendment ca n n o t  a u t o m a t i c a l l y  be read  i n t o  

s e c t i o n  1981 i t s e l f .

4J  Cong. Globe,  41st  Cong. ,  2d S e s s . ,  p. 3658. 
Senator Stewart expla ined  that  under the b i l l  "We 
w i l l  p r o t e c t  Chinese a l i e n s  or  any o th er  a l i e n s  
whom we a l l o w  t o  come h e r e ,  and g i v e  them a 
hear ing  in our c o u r t ;  l e t  them sue and be sued; 
l e t  them be p r o t e c t e d  by a l l  the laws and the same 
laws that o th er  men a r e . "  See a l s o  i d . p. 3807. 
The proposa l  to  reenac t  the 1866 Act was o r i g i n a l l y  
p a r t  o f  S. No. 865 ,  j ^ .  p.  3409 ,  which  was 
r e f e r r e d  to  at the time as "The Chinese b i l l . "  
I d . p. 3702 (remarks o f  Sen. Thurman).



12

On the  o t h e r  hand,  t h e  1866 Act  in  many 

in s tan ces  cannot be construed  simply by r e f e r r i n g  

to o ther  c i v i l  r i g h t s  l e g i s l a t i o n .  F i r s t ,  there 

may be se v e r a l  o th er  c i v i l  r i g h t s  s t a t u t e s  c o v e r ­

in g  the same s u b j e c t  m a t t e r  wh ich  may n o t  s e t  

i d e n t i c a l  su bs tan t ive  or procedura l  standards .  In 

the  i n s t a n t  c a s e ,  a l t h o u g h  T i t l e  V I I  does  not  

r e q u i r e  p r o o f  o f  d i s c r i m i n a t o r y  i n t e n t ,  T i t l e  VI, 

which a l s o  app l ie s  to  h i r i n g  under c e r t a i n  c ircum­

s t a n c e s ,  may e s t a b l i s h  a d i f f e r e n t  r u l e ,  s ee  

Regents  o f  U n iv e rs i ty  o f  C a l i f o r n i a  v .  Bakke, 57 

L . E d .2d  750,  7 6 7 - 6 9 ,  7 9 5 -8 0 3  ( 1 9 7 8 ) ,  and the

a n t i - d i s c r i m i n a t i o n  p r o v i s i o n  o f  the Revenue 

Sharing Act ,  31 U.S.C.  51242(a ) ,  cou ld  have even 

another meaning. S i m i la r l y ,  i f  a d ispute  arose  as 

to whether the p r i n c i p l e  o f  respondeat super io r  

should be app l ied  in a s e c t i o n  1981 case ,  r e f e r e n c e  

cou ld  be made to 42 U.S.C. §1983, which r e j e c t s  

t h a t  p r i n c i p l e ,  Monell v .  Department o f  S o c ia l  

S e r v i c e s , 56 L.Ed.2d 611, 636-38 (1978 ) ,  or to

T i t l e  VII  which ap p l ie s  i t  .—^Second, i t  was the 

c l e a r  in tent  o f  Congress in adopting T i t l e  VII not 

to  r e p e a l  any p r e - e x i s t i n g  r i g h t s  under o t h e r  

s t a t u t e s .  Both in  1964 and i n  1972 C o n g r e ss  

r e j e c t e d  proposa ls  to  make T i t l e  VII  the e x c lu s iv e

5/  See, e . g . ,  Reyes v .  Matthews, 428 F.Supp. 
300, 301 (D.D.C. 1976) .



-  13 -

(S /p r o h i b i t i o n  aga inst  employment d i s c r i m i n a t i o n ' In 

1972 o p p o n e n t s  o f  such a p r o p o s a l  e x p r e s s l y  

r e f e r r e d  to  the 1866 C i v i l  Rights Act and argued 

that i t  was needed s in c e  "employees are not f u l l y  

p r o t e c t e d "  by T i t l e  VII because o f  the r e s t r i c ­

t i o n s  w r i t t e n  i n to  T i t l e  VII to  assure i t s  pas­

sag e .—  ̂ In 1964 a J u s t i c e  Department memorandum 

p l a c e d  in  the  C o n g r e s s i o n a l  R e c o r d  by S e n a t o r  

Clark s ta t ed  " [ T ] i t l e  VII i s  not intended to and 

do e s  no t  deny t o  any i n d i v i d u a l ,  r i g h t s  and

remedies which he may pursue under o th er  Federal
8 /and S t a t e  S t a t u t e s " . — Thus w h i l e  the  jar p a r i  

materia  ru le  may be used where i t  would have a 

p o s s i b l y  expansive impact on s e c t i o n  1981, that 

ru le  cannot be r e l i e d  on to  read in t o  s e c t i o n  1981 

e i t h e r  the substant ive- -̂ or procedural— ^ l im it a ­
t i o n s  o f  T i t l e  VII.

6. See 118 Cong. R e c . 3964-65 (1972 ) ;  110 Cong. 
R ec . 13650-52 (1964 ) ;  Runyon v .  McCrary, 427 U.S. 
at 174-75; Alexander v .  Gardner-Denver C o . ,  415 
U.S. 36, 48, n .9 (1974) .

]_/ 118 Cong. Rec .  3372 ( rem ark s  o f  Sen.
W i l l ia m s ) ,  3962 (remarks o f  Sen. J a v i t s ) .

8/  110 Cong. Rec. 7207.

9/  See, e . g . ,  42 U.S.C. §§2000e(b ) ,  2 0 0 0 e - l ,
2000e -2 ( f ) ,  2000e -2 (h ) ,  2 0 0 0 e - 2 ( i ) ,  2 0 0 0 e - 2 ( j ) .

10/  See, e . g . ,  42 U.S.C. § § 2 0 0 0 e - 5 ( c ) , 2000e-
5 ( e ) ,  2 0 0 0 e - 5 ( f ) ,  2 0 0 0 e -5 (g ) .



The language o f  s e c t i o n  1 o f  the 1866 C i v i l  

Rights Act does not e x p r e s s ly  l im i t  i t s  p r o t e c ­

t i o n s  to cases o f  i n t e n t i o n a l  d i s c r i m i n a t i o n .  I t  

prov ides  that a l l  " c i t i z e n s ,  o f  every race  and 

c o l o r ,  without regard to any prev ious c o n d i t i o n  

o f  s la v e r y  or  invo luntary  serv i tu de  . . .  s h a l l  have 

the same r i g h t  . . .  t o  make and e n fo rce  c o n t r a c t s  

. . . .  as i s  en joyed by white  c i t i z e n s . "— ^Grammati­

c a l l y  the r e f e r e n c e s  to  race  and prev ious  s e r v i ­

tude merely e x p la in  who is  included w ith in  the 

p r o t e c t i o n  o f  the s t a t u t e ,  not what r i g h t s  are 

c o n f e r r e d .  Cf . McDonald v ,  Santa Fe T r a i l  Trans­

p o r t a t i o n  Co. ,  427 U.S. 273, 288 (1976 ) .  Sect ion  

2 o f  the Act ,  which c l e a r l y  did  have a p a r t i c u l a r  

in te n t  requirement,  r e f e r r e d  to  p e n a l t i e s  on any 

person "on account o f  such person having at any 

time been he ld  in a c o n d i t i o n  o f  s l a v e r y "  or  "by 

reason o f  h i s  race  or  c o l o r " ,  but th is  terminology  

i s  not used in  s e c t i o n  1. S i m i la r l y ,  the phrase 

"because o f  race  or  c o l o r "  was used in  s e c t i o n  14

-  14 -
I

11/ 14 Sta t .  27.



-  15 -

o f  the Freedmen's Bureau Act o f  1866-=—' t o  i n d i c a t e  

an in te n t  requirement.  The broader language o f  

s e c t i o n  1 o f  the  C i v i l  R i g h t s  A ct  was n o t ,  we 

suggest ,  "a mere s l i p  o f  the l e g i s l a t i v e  p e n . "  

Jon es  v .  A l f r e d  Mayer C o . ,  392 U.S .  409 ,  427 

( 1 9 6 8 ) .  The r e f e r e n c e  t o  the  r i g h t s  a c t u a l l y  

" e n jo y e d "  by w h i te s ,  instead  o f  a mere requirement 

that there be no express d i f f e r e n c e  in r i g h t s ,  

contemplates on i t s  face  e q u a l i t y  in the p r a c t i c a l  

consequences o f  r i g h t s .  This i s  c o n s i s t e n t  with 

Senator Trumbul l 's  a s s e r t i o n  when in t r o d u c in g  the 

b i l l  that " [ t ] h e r e  i s  very  l i t t l e  importance in 

the general  d e c l a r a t i o n  o f  a b s t ra c t  truths and 

p r i n c i p l e s  unless  they can be c a r r i e d  in to  e f f e c t ,  

un less  the persons who are to  be a f f e c t e d  by them 

have some means o f  a v a i l i n g  themselves o f  th e i r  
b e n e f i t s . ^

The one u n d i s p u t e d  g o a l  o f  C o n g r e ss  in 
enact ing  the C i v i l  Rights Act was " e l im i n a t i n g  the 

infamous Black Codes ."  Jones v.  A l f r e d  Mayer Co. ,  

392 U.S .  409 ,  433 ( 1 9 7 8 ) .  The c o d e s  were e x -

12/

12/ 14 Sta t .  177.

13 /  Cong. G l o b e ,  39th C o n g . ,  1st  S e s s . ,  474.



-  16 -

p r e s s l y  r e f e r r e d  t o  by b o t h  the  House-^-/"and 

S e n a t e ^ ^ sp o n s o rs  o f  the Act .  In responding to 

Pres ident  Johnson's  ve to  message, Senator Trumbull 

i n s i s t e d  that  i t  was these " o p p r e s s i v e "  laws which 

made l e g i s l a t i o n  necessary  ,-5-^Congres s was th or ­

oughly f a m i l i a r  with the d e t a i l s  o f  these  Codes;  

they were quoted on the f l o o r  and the s ta t us  o f  

l e g i s l a t i o n  in  each  s t a t e  was the s u b j e c t  o f  

repeated  d i s c u s s i o n s  Congress c l e a r l y  under­
stood  that  i f  the C i v i l  Rights Acts were passed

18/those  Codes would be " a n n u l l e d " . —  A c co rd in g ly  

the terms and nature o f  the Black Codes themselves 

are o f  su b s t a n t i a l  importance in determining  the 
in te n t  o f  Congress.

The C i v i l  Rights Act guarantees b lacks  the 

r i g h t  t o  "make . . .  c o n t r a c t s "  and Congressman 

Thayer complained that the Black Codes " impair  

[ f reedm ens ' ]  a b i l i t y  to  make c o n t r a c t s  f o r  labor

14/ Id. pp. 39, 40, 41 (remarks o f  Rep. Wilson)

15/ Id. pp. 474, 475 (remarks o f  Sen. Trumbull)

16,/ Id. p. 1759.

17/
1118-

See n n . 14 
-19, 1123-25,

- 1 6 ,  i n f r a ;  see a l s o  i d .  pp 
1151-53, 1159-60, 1838, 1839

18 /  I d . 
W i lson ) .

pp. 39, 40 :, 41,  111 ( rem arks  o f  Rep



17

in such a manner as v i r t u a l l y  to depr iv e  them o f
19/the power o f  making such c o n t r a c t s . " —  None o f  

the Black Codes,  however,  l i t e r a l l y  forbade b lacks  

from making labor  c o n t r a c t s ;  on the con trary ,  they 

contemplated that such c o n t r a c t s  would be made and 

f r e q u e n t ly  requ ired  that  they be in  w r i t i n g , — ^a 

p r a c t i c e  encouraged by the Freedmen's Bureau. The 

p r o v i s i o n s  o f  the Codes with which Congress was 

concerned a f f e c t e d  freedom o f  c o n t r a c t  in a d i f ­

f e r e n t  manner, and were g e n e r a l l y  r a c i a l l y  n eutra l  

on t h e i r  f a c e ,  though not in t h e i r  e f f e c t .  The

p r o v i s i o n s  most r e p e a te d ly  o b j e c t e d  to  by Congress
21 /were the vagrancy laws .—  These s t a t u t e s  de f ined  

vagrants in such a broad way as to inc lude  v i r ­

t u a l l y  any a d u l t  b l a c k  who was n o t  g a i n f u l l y  

employed, and prov ided  that any person c o n v ic te d  

o f  vagrancy cou ld  be punished by being bound out

19/ Cong. Globe, 39th Cong, 1st S e s s . ,  p. 1151.

20/  W. Fleming, Documentary H istory  o f  Reconstruc ­
t i o n ,  v .  1, pp. 288 ( M i s s i s s i p p i ) ,  299 (South  
C a r o l i n a ) ;  E. McPherson, P o l i t i c a l  H istory  o f  the 
U n i t e d  S t a t e s  o f  A m er ica  During  The P e r i o d  Of 
R e co n s t r u c t i o n ,  p. 39 ( F l o r i d a ) .

21/  See Cong. Globe,  39th Cong. ,  1st S e s s . ,  pp. 
504 (remarks o f  Sen. Howard), 1123, 1124 (remarks 
o f  Rep. C o o k ) ,  1151 ( rem arks  o f  Rep. T h a y e r ) ,  
1160 (remarks o f  Rep. Windom).



18 -

to  any person f o r  a pe r io d  o f  up to one y e a r . — ^Of

the f i v e  such laws, however,  four conta ined  no

r e f e r e n c e  to  r a c e ,  and l i t e r a l l y  app l ied  to  whites

as w e l l  as b la c k s .  In M i s s i s s i p p i  the general

d e f i n i t i o n  o f  vagrancy app l ied  to everyone,  but

the law a l s o  deemed as vagrants freedmen,

r e g a r d le s s  o f  t h e i r  employment, who were " found

unlaw fu ll y  assembling t o g e t h e r " ,  but even in  that

case whites  assembling with the freedmen were a lso
23 /cons idered  v a g r a n ts .—

Secon d in  i m p o r t a n c e  t o  the  v a g r a n c y  laws 

were s t a t e  laws r e g u la t i n g  the terms and condi-*
r\ / j

t i o n s  o f  e m p lo y m e n t . ---- ' T h e s e  p r o v i d e d ,  i n t e r

a i i a ; that an employee 's  wages would be f o r f e i t e d  

i f  he did not  complete the term o f  h i s  c o n t r a c t ,  

that he cou ld  be f in e d  by h is  employer f o r  d i s ­

obed ience ,  be ing "absent from home without l e a v e " ,  

or f o r  i n j u r i e s  to  t o o l s  and animals.  No v i s i t o r s

22/  McPherson, supra , pp. 30 ( M i s s i s s i p p i ) ,  33 
( G e o r g i a ) ,  39 ( F l o r i d a ) ,  41 ( V i r g i n i a ) ,  4 3 - 4 4  
( L o u i s i a n a ) .

23/ Fleming, supra , p. 284. In a d d i t io n  only  
b lack  vagrants cou ld  be h i r e d  out to  earn t h e i r  
f i n e s .  W_. p. 285.

24/  See Cong. R e c . ,  39th Cong. ,  1st S e s s . , 39 
(remarks o f  Rep. Wilson)  (p r o v i s i o n s  o f  Georgia 
r e g u la t i o n s  condemned as "degrading and a r b i t r a r y " )



19; -

c o u l d  be r e c e i v e d  d u r i n g  w o r k in g  h o u r s  and no

l i v e s t o c k  k e p t  w i t h o u t  the  e m p l o y e r ' s  p e r m i s -  
2 5 /

s i o n . ----  D i s o b e d i e n c e  by an e m p lo y e e  was a

cr im in a l  o f f e n s e ,  and the employer cou ld  have a

worker whipped f o r  "want o f  r e sp e ct  and c i v i l i t y

to  h i m s e l f ,  h i s  fam i ly ,  guests  or  a g e n t s " .— 'Most

s t a t e s  made i t  a crime to  induce an employee away

from h is  j o b ,  thus e f f e c t i v e l y  l o ck in g  him in to
2 7 /w o r k in g  f o r  h i s  o l d  m a st e r ---- f o r  at  l e a s t  the

term o f  each c o n t r a c t ,  and in South Carol ina  an

employee could  not c o n t r a c t  with a new employer

"without pro d u ct io n  o f  the d i scharge  o f  h i s  former
2 8 /m a s t e r . " —  These  o n e r o u s  r e g u l a t i o n s ,  in  the

case o f  South Caro l in a , Alabama, and Louis iana,
l i t e r a l l y app l ied  to  a l l laborers reg a r d le ss  o f
race  :; in M i s s i s s i p p i  and F lo r id a , on the o th er
hand., they appl ied  on ly  to b l a c k s .

25/ See , e . g . , McPherson, supra, p . 39 ( F l o r i d a ) .

2 6 /  See ,  
C a r o l i n a ) .

e . g . ,  F lem in g , su p r a , p.  301 (South

27/ See, e . g . , McPherson,, supra, pp. 31 ( M i s s i s -
s i p p i ) ,  34 (Alabama), 40 ( F l o r i d a ) ,  43 ( L o u i s i ­
ana) ;  Fleming, supra , pp. 287-9 ( M i s s i s s i p p i ) ,  302 
(South C a r o l in a ) .

28/  Fleming, supra , p. 30-2.



-  20

Third,  South Carol ina  and M i s s i s s i p p i  e s t a b ­
l i s h e d  by s t a t u t e  apparently  harsh ru les  

regarding  the r e l a t i o n s h i p  o f  masters and appren­

t i c e s ,  but in genera l  these p r o v i s i o n s  applied 
r e g a r d le s s  o f  r a c e . — ^

Thus the p r o v i s i o n s  o f  the Black Codes which 

r e s t r i c t e d  the r ig h t  o f  freedmen to  c o n t r a c t  did 

so in most instances  in a r a c i a l l y  neutr a l  manner. 

Congress,  however,  had no doubt that  adoption  o f  

the C i v i l  Rights Act would be s u f f i c i e n t  by i t s e l f  

to abrogate  the Codes. Nothing in  the l e g i s l a t i v e  

h i s t o r y  suggests  that Congress assumed the Codes 

would remain in e f f e c t  unless  and u n t i l  i t  was 

p r o v e d  at  t r i a l  t h a t  t h e y  had been  a d o p t e d  t o  

d i s c r im in a t e  aga inst  b la c k s ;  indeed,  under the 

then  a p p l i c a b l e  d e c i s i o n s  o f  t h i s  Court  an 

in qu iry  in t o  the motives o f  a l e g i s l a t u r e  would 
im perm iss ib le .  F le t c h e r  v .  Peck , 6 

Cranch .  87,  130 ( 1 8 1 0 ) ;  Ex p a r t e  M c C ard le ,  7

29/ Id,  pp. 282-83 ( M i s s i s s i p p i ) ,  297-99 (South 
C a r o l in a ) .  M i s s i s s i p p i ,  but not South C aro l in a ,  
auth or ized  l o c a l  c ourts  to apprent ice  out black  
c h i l d r e n  whose p a r e n t s  c o u l d  n o t  or  would  not  
support them. South C aro l in a ,  but not M i s s i s ­
s i p p i ,  r e q u i r e d  t h a t  an a r t i s a n  who needed  a 
l i c e n s e  to  p r a c t i c e  h is  trade must a l so  ob ta in  a 
l i c e n s e  f o r  a b la c k ,  but apparent ly  not a white ,  
a p p r e n t i c e .



-  21

Wall .  506, 514 (1869 ) .  ^To the extent that the

Thir ty -N inth  Congress d is c u s se d  the purposes o f

southern l e g i s l a t u r e s ,  i t  was concerned with a

continued s p i r i t  o f  i n s u r r e c t i o n  and a d e s i r e  to  
31/preserve  s l a v e r y ; —  c e r t a i n l y  p r o o f  o f  that s o r t  o f  

m ot iva t ion  i s  not re qu ire d  to  e s t a b l i s h  a 
v i o l a t i o n  o f  s e c t i o n  1981.

The c h a r a c t e r i s t i c  o f  the Black Codes which 
p laced  them square ly  w ith in  the p r o h i b i t i o n s  o f  

the C i v i l  Rights Act ,  and which was the c e n tr a l  

reason f o r  c o n g re s s i o n a l  a c t i o n ,  was that "under 

o ther  names and in o ther  forms a system o f  invo lu n ­

tary  serv i tu de  [was] perpetuated over th is  u n f o r -  
32/tunate r a c e . " —  The s o c i a l  c o n d i t i o n s  extant b e -

3 0 /  T h is  r u l e  was adhered  t o  as r e c e n t l y  as 
Palmer v.  Thompson, 403 U.S. 217, 224-25 (1971) .  
A l t h o u g h  PaImer i n d i c a t e s ,  and W ashington  v .  
D av is , 426 U.S. 229 (1976 ) ,  ho lds  that an inqu iry  
i n t o  l e g i s l a t i v e  m o t i v e  may be n e c e s s a r y ,  and 
hence p e r m i s s ib l e ,  under the Fourteenth Amendment, 
that Amendment was not r a t i f i e d  u n t i l  two years 
a f t e r  p a s s a g e  o f  the 1866 C i v i l  R i g h t s  A c t .

31/  I d . ,  pp. 1839 (remarks o f  Sen. C larke ) ,  1785 
(remarks o f  Sen. Stew art ) .

32/  I d . ,  p. 1124 (remarks o f  Rep. Cook) .



-  22

f o r e  t h e  a d o p t i o n  o f  the T h i r t e e n t h  Amendment

were  " p e r p e t u a t e d "  i n  two s e n s e s .  F i r s t ,  the

r e s t r i c t i o n s  in  f a c t  s u f f e r e d  by b l a c k s  were

s i m i la r  i f  not i d e n t i c a l  to  those imposed in an
33/e x p r e s s ly  r a c i a l  manner by the o ld  s lave  c o d e s . —

Second, the r a c i a l l y  neutra l  p r o v i s i o n s  o f  the

then Black Codes bore  p r im ar i ly  on b lacks  because

o f  the s o c i a l  and economic consequences o f  the

r e c e n t l y  ended d i s c r im in a t o r y  laws and economic

system o f  the s lave  s t a t e s .  Thus Senator Clarke

asser ted  the Codes would " v i r t u a l l y  make s e r f s  o f

the  p e r s o n s  t h a t  the  c o n s t i t u t i o n a l  amendment
3 4 /

made f r e e " . — R e p r e s e n t a t i v e  Thayer  f e l t  the

Codes would " r e t a i n  [freedmen] in a s t a t e  o f  r ea l  
35 /s e r v i t u d e " . ---- R e p r e s e n t a t i v e  Cook u rg e d  the

36/Codes would " v i r t u a l l y  r e e n s la v e "  the b l a c k s , —

and Representa tive  Wilson f e l t  that under them
3 7 /

b lacks  were " p r a c t i c a l l y  s l a v e s " . — - Since Congress

3 3 /  I d . p.  474 ( rem ark s  o f  Sen.  T r u m b u l l ) .

34/ Id. P- 1839

35/ Id. P- 1151

36/ Id. P- 1124

37/ Id. P- 41.



23

was concerned with the p r a c t i c a l  consequences o f  

the B la c k  C odes ,  i t  n a t u r a l l y  r e g a r d e d  the 

vagrancy and labor  r e g u l a t i o n  laws, whose harsh 

impact f e l l  p r im a r i ly  on former s l a v e s ,  as d e p r iv ­

in g  them o f  " t h e  same r i g h t  . . .  t o  make and 

e n f o r c e  c o n t r a c t s  . . .  as i s  e n j o y e d  by w h i t e  
c i t i z e n s . "

The o th er  r i g h t s  with which the C i v i l  Rights

Act was concerned were g e n e r a l l y  d e a l t  with by the

s o u t h e r n  s t a t e s ,  i f  at a l l ,  in  an e x p r e s s l y

r a c i a l  manner,  but  t h e s e  p r o v i s i o n s  were l e s s

common and o f  l e s s  p r a c t i c a l  importance than the

labor  and vagrancy p o r t i o n s  o f  the Black Codes.
No example was c i t e d  during the debates o f  a Black

Code which l im i te d  the r igh t  o f  freedmen to  sue

and be p a r t i e s ;  th is  c lause  appears to  have been

added because there  were such r e s t r i c t i o n s  in the
3 8 /o l d  S la v e  C o d e s , ---- ' b u t  the B l a c k  Codes that

mention the r i g h t  to sue and be sued a l l  e x p re ss ly

3 8 /  S e n a t o r  Sherman u rg e d  t h a t  t h i s  r i g h t  be 
p r o t e c t e d  because a man would not  "be f r e e  without 
the r i g h t  t o  sue and be su e d ,  t o  p l e a d  and be 
impleaded ."  Cong. Globe,  39th Cong.,  1st Sess.  
41.



24 -

gave t h a t  r i g h t  t o  b l a c k s . —  No l i m i t a t i o n s

appear to have e x i s t e d  with regard to  personal

p r o p e r ty .  The l i m i t a t i o n s  on the ownership o f

r e a l  p r o p e r t y  were e x p r e s s l y  r a c i a l ,  but  so

f a r  as we have  been  a b l e  t o  a s c e r t a i n  t h e s e
40/e x i s t e d  only  m  M i s s i s s i p p i —  and c e r t a i n  l o c a l -  

• ■ • . . . 41 /l t i e s  w i t h i n  L o u i s i a n a . ----  In g e n e r a l  s t a t e

laws prov ided  f o r  the same cr im in a l  p e n a l t i e s  f o r
/ *7 /

b lacks  and w h i t e s , —  except  that the rape o f  a

white woman by a b la ck  man was o f t e n  the su b je c t
43/o f  a h e av ie r  p e n a l t y . —  Those Codes de a l in g  with 

test imony by freedmen e i t h e r  al lowed i t  in a l l

3 9 /

39/  McPherson, supra pp. 29 (North C a r o l in a ) ,  31 
( M i s s i s s i p p i ) ,  321 (G e o r g ia ) ,  33 (Alabama), 34 
(Sou th  C a r o l i n a ) ,  42 ( T e n n e s s e e ) ,  43 ( T e x a s ) ;  
Fleming, supra , p. 274 (Arkansas) .

40/  McPher son, supra , p. 31.

41 /  McPherson ,  s u p r a , p .  279 ( p a r i s h  o f  S t .  
L a n d r y ) ;  W. F le m in g ,  Documents R e l a t i n g  to 
R e co n s tru c t io n ,  p. 31 (town o f  Ope lousas) ( h e r e i n -  
a f t e r  c i t e d  as "Documents") .

42 /  McPherson, supra , p. 33 (G e o r g ia ) ;  Fleming, 
supra , pp. 289 ( M i s s i s s i p p i ) ,  293 (North C a r o l in a ) .

4 3 /  F l e m in g ,  s u p r a , p .  293 (N o r t h  C a r o l i n a ) ;  
McPherson, supra, p. 34 (South C a r o l in a ) .



25

cases— ' o r  in any case where a b la ck  was a party
45 /or  had an i n t e r e s t . ----  On the  o t h e r  hand,  the

B l a c k  Codes c o n t a i n e d  numerous o t h e r  forms o f  

e x p r e s s ly  r a c i a l  d i s c r i m i n a t i o n  which were not dea l t

with by the C i v i l  Rights A c t ,  in c lu d in g  p r o h i b i -
. . . 46 /  . .t i o n s  against  b lacks  owning guns,—  c o - h a b i t i n g

47 /  . • • 48/with w h i t e s , — attend ing  white  p u b l i c  s c h o o l s , —
• • 4 9 /  j „ • 5 0 / „ .s e r v i n g  on j u r i e s ----  and v o t i n g . —  Thus w h i l e

the C i v i l  Rights Act c l e a r l y  p r o h ib i t e d  in t e n ­
t i o n a l  r a c i a l  d i s c r i m i n a t i o n  in the areas with 

which i t  was concerned,  the g r e a t e s t  p r a c t i c a l  

impact o f  n u l l i f y i n g  the Black Codes, as Congress

4 4 /  F l e m in g ,  s u p r a , pp. 274 ( A r k a n s a s ) ,  275
(Alabama); McPherson, supra , p. 42 (Tennessee ) .

45 /  McPherson, supra, p. 29 (North C a r o l in a ) ;
Fleming, supra , pp. 287 ( M i s s i s s i p p i ) ,  293 North 
C a r o l in a ) ,  311 (Texas ) .

46/  Fleming, supra , p. 289 ( M i s s i s s i p p i ) .

47/  I d . pp. 273, 274 (Alabama), 288 ( M i s s i s s i p p i )

48/  I d . pp. 275 (Arkansas) ,  277-78 ( F l o r i d a ) ,  311 
(T ennessee ) ,  312 (Texas ) .

4 9 /  I d .  p p . 275 ( A r k a n s a s ) ,  311 ( T e n n e s s e e ) .  

50/  Id.  p. 275 (Arkansas) .



-  26 -

must have been aware, was the e l im i n a t i o n  o f  the 

p r o v i s i o n s  on labor  and vagrancy,  o f t e n  r a c i a l l y  

n eu tra l  on t h e i r  f a c e ,  which had the e f f e c t  o f  

perpetuat in g  the i n f e r i o r  stautes  to  which b lack  

w o r k e r s  had e a r l i e r  be e n  c o n s i g n e d  b e c a u s e  o f  
t h e i r  race .

Th is  c o n s t r u c t i o n  o f  the 1866 Act  i s  c o n ­

f i r m e d  by the r e s p o n s e s  t o  the  B la c k  Codes o f  

the m i l i t a r y  o f f i c i a l s  in  c h a r g e  o f  the  u n io n  

f o r c e s  then occupy ing  the south.  With the knowl­

edge and approval  o f  the Th ir ty -N inth  Congress,  

commanding generals  annulled p r o v i s i o n s  o f  the 

Black Codes in M i s s i s s i p p i ,  V i r g i n i a ,  Alabama, 

North Carol ina  and South Carol ina .— ^This a c t i o n  

was not l im i te d  to  the e x p r e ss ly  r a c i a l  p r o v i s i o n s  

o f  those Codes;  in South C aro l in a ,  f o r  example, 

General S i c k l e s '  o rders  i n v a l id a t e d  the r a c i a l l y  

n e u t r a l  p r o v i s i o n s  o f  the  s t a t e ' s  laws which  

punished as vagrants peop le  who cou ld  not  f ind 

work ,  a u t h o r i z e d  c o r p o r a l  punishment f o r  d i s ­
obedient employees, and prec luded workers from 

taking a new job  without the approval  o f  t h e i r

51/  Cong. Globe,  39th Cong. ,  1st S e s s . ,  pp. 39, 
111, 603 (remarks o f  Rep. W i lso n ) ,  1123 (remarks 
o f  Rep. Cook) .



27

52/  . . . . .former employer .—  In s t r i k i n g  down the V i r g i n i a

vagrancy law, General  Terry,  in an explanat ion

q u o t e d  in  p a r t  by S e n a t o r  Trum bul l  d u r i n g  the
53 /d e b a t e s  on the  C i v i l  R i g h t s  A c t , —  made no 

r e f e r e n c e  to  the motives o f  the l e g i s l a t u r e ,  but 

c o n s i d e r e d  o n l y  the  f a c t  t h a t  " [ t  ]he  u l t i m a t e  

e f f e c t  o f  the  s t a t u t e  w i l l  be t o  r e d u c e  the 

freedmen to  a c o n d i t i o n  o f  s erv i tu de  worse than 

that  from which they have been emancipated —  a 

c o n d i t i o n  which w i l l  be s la v e r y  in a l l  but i t s

52/  McPherson, supra , pp. 36-37 ,  H I V ,  X I I I ,  XVII.

53/  Cong. Globe,  39th Cong. ,  1st S e s s . ,  p. 1759.

5 4 /  T h is  i s  the p a s s a g e  q u o t e d  by S e n a t o r  
Trumbull.  The more d e t a i l e d  exp lanat ion  which 
preceded was as f o l l o w s :  " In  many count ies  o f
t h i s  State meetings o f  employers have been h e ld ,  
and unjust  and wrongful  combinations have been 
entered  i n to  f o r  the purpose o f  depress ing  the 
wages o f  the  f reedm en  b e lo w  the  r e a l  v a l u e  o f  
t h e i r  l a b o r ,  far  below the p r i c e s  formerly  paid by 
masters f o r  labor  performed by t h e i r  s l a v e s .  By 
reason o f  these  combinations wages u t t e r l y  in ­
adequate to the support  o f  themselves and f a m i l i e s  
have, in many p l a c e s ,  become the usual  and common 
wages o f  the freedmen. The e f f e c t  o f  the s ta t ut e  
in  q u e s t i o n  w i l l  b e ,  t h e r e f o r e ,  t o  com pe l  the 
freedmen, under penal ty  o f  punishment as c r im in a l s ,  
to  accept  and labor  f o r  the wages e s t a b l i s h e d  by



-  28 -

I t  i s  thus c l e a r  that  Congress did not intend 

that the p r o h i b i t i o n  o f  the 1866 C i v i l  Rights Act 

be l im i t e d  t o  instances  where r a c i a l  motive could 

be proven, but was concerned about whether the 

consequence o f  a p a r t i c u l a r  law or  p r a c t i c e  was to 

render b lacks  s i g n i f i c a n t l y  l e s s  able  to  en joy  the 

r i g h t s  e x e r c i s e d  by w hites .  This Court need not  

in t h i s  case dec ide  a l l  p o s s i b l e  l e g a l  questi ons  

which might a r i s e  from t h i s  aspec t  o f  the Act .  I t  

is  s u f f i c i e n t  f o r  the d i s p o s i t i o n  o f  th is  case  to 

ho ld  that a p r a c t i c e  which prevents such equal  

enjoyment by perpetuat in g  past i n t e n t i o n a l  d i s ­

c r im in at ion  i s  f o rb idden  by s e c t i o n  1981. That 

was c l e a r l y  the impact o f  the Black Codes, f o r  

t h e i r  r e a d i l y  p e rce iv e d  c o e r c i v e  e f f e c t  on b la ck s ,  

and r e l a t i v e l y  minor e f f e c t  on w h i te s ,  der ived  

from the d r a s t i c a l l y  d i f f e r e n t  s o c i a l ,  economic 

and edu ca t ion a l  s ta tus  o f  b la ck  and white  workers,

54/  Cont ' d .

these combinations o f  employers.  I t  p la ces  them 
whol ly  in the power o f  t h e i r  employers,  and i t  
is  easy to f o r e s e e  th at ,  even where no such combina­
t i o n  now e x i s t s ,  t h e  t e m p t a t i o n  t o  form them 
o f f e r e d  by the s t a t u t e  w i l l  be too st rong  to  be 
r e s i s t e d ,  and t h a t  such  i n a d e q u a t e  wages w i l l  
become the common and usual  wages throughout the 
S t a t e . "  McPherson, supra, p. 42.



-  29

which was in turn ro o t e d  in  a centu ry  o f  s lav ery  

and d i s c r i m i n a t i o n .

T h is  c o n s t r u c t i o n  o f  s e c t i o n  1981 a c c o r d s  

with the e s t a b l i s h e d  c o n s t r u c t i o n  o f  the Four­

teenth Amendment. This Court has r e p e a t e d ly  he ld  

that  n eu tra l  s t a t e  p r a c t i c e s  which perpetuate  the 

e f f e c t s  o f  past  i n t e n t i o n a l  d i s c r im in a t io n  are 

t h e m s e l v e s  u n l a w f u l .  A s c h o o l  b o a r d  which  

e a r l i e r  assigned students on the bas is  o f  race  

remains in v i o l a t i o n  o f  the C o n s t i t u t i o n  i f  i t  

adopts a p o l i c y  o f  r e a ss ig n in g  students each year 

to  the s ch o o l  they attended p r e v i o u s l y ,  su b je c t  

o n l y  t o  a t r a n s f e r  p r o c e d u r e  whose burdens  

are  so  g r e a t  as t o  l o c k  s t u d e n t s  i n t o  t h e i r  

o r i g i n a l  s c h o o l .  Green v .  S c h o o l  Board o f

New Kent C o u n t y , 391 U .S .  430 ( 1 9 6 8 ) .  A g e o ­

g r a p h i c  ass ig n m e n t  p la n  t h a t  " a p p e a r s  to  be 

n e u t r a l "  i s  unlawful  i f  i t  maintains in opera­

t i o n  " t h e  c o n t i n u i n g  e f f e c t s  o f  p a s t  s c h o o l  

s e g r e g a t i o n . "  Swann v .  C h a r l o t t e - M e c k l e n b u r g  

Board o f  Ed. ,  402 U.S 1, 28 (1971 ) .  So long as a 

past act o f  i n t e n t i o n a l  d i s c r i m i n a t i o n  caused the 

p r e s e n t  ass ignm ent  o f  a w o r k e r  o r  s t u d e n t ,  
the  " r e m o t e n e s s  in  t i m e "  o f  the  p a s t  i n t e n ­

t i o n a l  c o n d u c t  i s  i r r e l e v a n t  t o  the  l e g a l i t y  

o f  present p r a c t i c e s  which perpetuate  i t s  impact.



-  30 -

Keyes v .  S c h o o l  D i s t r i c t  No. 1 , 413 U .S .  189,  

2 1 0 -211  ( 1 9 7 3 ) .  A s t a t e  which  in  an e a r l i e r  

pe r io d  re fu sed  to  permit b lacks  to  r e g i s t e r  to  

vo te  cannot t h e r e a f t e r  adopt a " n e u t r a l "  p o l i c y  o f  

p r o h i b i t i n g  r e g i s t r a t i o n  now by persons who f a i l e d  

to  r e g i s t e r  during that e a r l i e r  time. Lane v . 

W i l so n , 307 U.S. 265 (1939) .  See a l so  Moose Lodge 

No. 107 v .  I r v i s , 407 U.S. 163, 178-79 (1972 ) .  So 

long as a s t a t e  p r a c t i c e  perpetuates  the e f f e c t  o f  

past  d i s c r i m i n a t i o n  the s t a t e  i s  in v i o l a t i o n  o f  

the  C o n s t i t u t i o n ,  r e g a r d l e s s  o f  w h e th e r  t h a t  

p r a c t i c e  was adopted in good f a i t h .

The a p p l i c a t i o n  o f  w r i t t e n  t e s t s  such as 

those administered by p e t i t i o n e r s  w i l l  operate  to  

d i f f e r e n t i a t e  among a pp l i can ts  not p r i m a r i ly ,  i f  

at a l l ,  on the  b a s i s  o f  t h e i r  i n n a t e  a b i l i t y ,  

but a l s o ,  and perhaps s o l e l y  on the b a s i s  o f  the 

educati on  which they have r e c e iv e d .  In Gaston 

County v .  United S t a t e s , 395 U.S. 285 (1969 ) ,  th is  

Court re c o gn iz e d  that  as a p r a c t i c a l  matter  "among 

b lack  c h i ld r e n  compelled to endure a segregated  

and i n f e r i o r  e du ca t io n ,  fewer w i l l  achieve  any 

given degree o f  l i t e r a c y  than w i l l  t h e i r  b e t t e r  

educated white  co n t e m p o r a r ie s . "  395 U.S. at 295.



-  31

G aston  County drew th a t  in f e r e n c e  where the 

examination invo lved  t e s t e d  mere l i t e r a c y ;  the 

q u a l i t y  o f  an a p p l i c a n t ' s  e d u c a t i o n  i s  o f  f a r  

g re a te r  importance where, as here ,  the examination 

t e s t s  more complex v e r b a l  and mathematical  s k i l l s .  

I f  b l a c k  and M e x i c a n - A m e r i c a n  a p p l i c a n t s  were 

d e n i e d  e q u a l  e d u c a t i o n a l  o p p o r t u n i t i e s  w h i l e  

young, the " [ i I m p a r t ia l  a dm in is t ra t ion  o f  the . . .  

t e s t  today would serve on ly  to perpetuate  these 

i n e q u i t i e s  in a d i f f e r e n t  f o rm ."  395 U.S, at 297. 

P r a c t i c e s  which thus perpetuated  the e f f e c t  o f  

past d i s c r i m i n a t i o n  in educat ion  would have been 

p a r t i c u l a r l y  o b n o x i o u s  t o  the C o n g r e ss  which 

e n a c t e d  the  F o u r t e e n t h  Amendment and th e  1866 

C i v i l  Rights A c t ;  that Congress was f u l l y  aware o f  

the f a c t  that  p r i o r  to  the C i v i l  War the Slave 

Codes o f  most s t a t e s  forbade teaching  s l a v e s ,  and 
in some cases even freedmen, to read and w r i t e ,  

and that s im i la r  p r o h i b i t i o n s  were s t i l l  in  e f f e c t  

in 1866. Brown v.  Board o f  E du cat ion , 347 U.S 

483, 490 (1954 ) . — ''

55/  Cong. Globe, 39th Cong. ,  1st S e s s . ,  pp. 39 
(remarks o f  Rep. W i lson ) ,  474 (remarks o f  Sen. 
Trumbull.  P r i o r  to  the C i v i l  War, teachers were 
a c t u a l l y  j a i l e d  f o r  i n s t r u c t i n g  b la c k  c h i ld r e n  to 
read.  H. Commager, Documents o f  American H is to ry ,  
pp. 327-29 (7th E d . ) .  A f te r  the C i v i l  War the Ku 
Klux Klan threatened and murdered north erners  who



-  32

P e t i t i o n e r s '  w r i t t e n  examinations perpetuate  

the d i s c r i m i n a t o r y  e f f e c t  o f  a centu ry  o f  purpose ­

f u l  r a c i a l  s e g r e g a t  i o n  o f  C a l i f o r n i a  p u b l i c  

s c h o o l s .  See Regents o f  U n iv e rs i ty  o f  C a l i f f o r n i a  

v . Bakke, 57 L.Ed.2d 750, 822 ( o p in io n  o f  J u s t i c e s  

Brennan,  W h ite ,  M a r s h a l l  and B l a c k m u n ) ( 1 9 7 8 ) .  

Soon a f t e r  the f i r s t  p u b l i c  " c o l o r e d  s c h o o l "  was 

opened in  San F r a n c i s c o  f o r  b l a c k  c h i l d r e n ,  

C a l i f o r n i a ' s  educati on  law was e x p r e s s ly  amended 

in 1860 to author ize  separate  s ch o o ls  f o r  "Negroes,  

M o n g o l i a n s  and I n d i a n s . " —  ̂ T h is  s t a t u t e  was 

r e p e a l e d  i n  1 8 8 0 , f o l l o w i n g  th e  c l o s i n g  o f

many o f  the separate b lack  sch oo ls  f o r  reasons o f  
5 8 /e c o n o m y ,—  but was r e p l a c e d  i n  1885 by a new

55/  C on t ' d .

had the e f f r o n t e r y  to teach southern b la c k s .  See 
Cong. G l o b e ,  39th  C o n g . ,  1s t  S e s s .  , p.  1834 
(remarks o f  Rep. Lawrence);  H. Swint, The Northern 
Teacher in the South, 1862-1870, pp. 94-142;  W. 
Fleming, Documentary H istory  o f  R e c o n s tr u c t i o n ,  
v .2 ,  pp. 203-206.

56/  1860 Cal.  S t a t s . ,  c . 3 2 9 ,  §8; see a l s o  1863
Cal . S t a t s . ,  c . 1 5 9 ,  §68.

57/  General School  Law o f  C a l i f o r n i a ,  §1662 at 
14 (1880) .

58/  C. Wollenberg ,  A l l  D e l ib e r a t e  Speed, Segrega­
t i o n  and Exc lus ion  in C a l i f o r n i a  Schoo ls  1855-1975, 
pp. 24-26 (1976) .



-  33 -

s t a t u t e  au t h o r i z in g  segregated  s c h o o l s  f o r  Chi­

nese ,  and l a t e r  Japanese,  Mongolian and Indian 
59/

c h i l d r e n . —  The s ta t e  Attorney  General  subse­

quently  issued an op in ion  that Mexican-Americans 

were Indians ,  and they were thus covered by th is  

l e g i s l a t i o n —  ̂; d e s p i t e  the absence o f  express 

s t a t u t o r y  a u t h o r i z a t i o n  f o r  e x c l u d i n g  b l a c k  

c h i ld r e n  from white s c h o o l s  the system atic  s e g r e ­

g a t io n  o f  b lacks  c o n t in u e d .—  ̂ The s t a t e  se g r e ­

g a t i o n  laws were n o t  r e p e a l e d  u n t i l  1947,  but  

d e s p i t e  t h a t  s t e p ,  and n o t w i t h s t a n d i n g  t h i s  

C o u r t ' s  d e c i s i o n  i n  Brown v .  Board o f  E duca ­

t i o n , C a l i f o r n i a  a u t h o r i t i e s  continued to  i n t e n ­

t i o n a l l y  exclude  b la ck  and Mexican-American c h i l ­
dren from white p u b l i c  s c h o o l s .  Within the la s t  

decade 20 major sch oo l  d i s t r i c t s  in C a l i f o r n i a ,

59/  1885 Cal.  S t a t s . ,  c . 1 1 7 ,  §1602 (C h in e se ) ;  
1893 Cal . S t a t s . ,  c . 1 9 3 ,  §1662 ( I n d i a n s ) ;  1921 Cal. 
S t a t s . ,  c . 6 8 5 ,  §1 (Japanese ) .

60/  22 C a l i f o r n i a  Department o f  J u s t i c e ,  Opinions 
o f  the Attorney  General ,  Opinion 6735a (January 
23, 1930) ,  931-32 (1930 ) .  See a l so  J. Hendrick, 
The Education o f  Non-Whites in C a l i f o r n i a ,  1849- 
1970, p. 87 (1977) .

61 /  See H e n d r i c k ,  s u p r a , at 7 8 - 8 0 ,  9 8 -1 0 0 .



-  34 -

6 2 /i n c l u d i n g  Los A n g e l e s , — ' h a v e  been  found  t o

be in v i o l a t i o n  o f  f e d e r a l  or  s t a t e  p r o h i b i t i o n s  
. . . 6 3 /a g a i n s t  d i s c r i m i n a t i o n . ----  About h a l f  o f  a l l

b l a c k  and M e x i c a n - A m e r i c a n  s t u d e n t s  a t t e n d i n g  

p u b l i c  s c h o o l s  in  C a l i f o r n i a  in  1970 were  in
rj f

d i s t r i c t s  operat in g  such segregated  s c h o o l s . — 'The 

d e l e t e r i o u s  impact on m in o r i ty  students o f  th is  
du a l  sy s t e m ,  which  J u s t i c e  D ou g las  p r o p e r l y  

c h a r a c t e r i z e d  as a " c l a s s i c  c a s e  o f  [ t h e ]  de 

ju r e  se g re g at io n  involved  in Brown v .  Board o f  
Educat ion , "— 'has  been conceded by s ta te  o f f i ­
c i a l s  . 66/

62/  See Kelsey v.  Weinberger, 498 F.2d 701, 704, 
n . 1 9  (D .C .  C i r .  1 9 7 4 ) ;  C raw ford  v .  Board o f  
Educat ion , 17 Cal.  3d 280, 130 Cal . Rptr . 724, 551 
P. 2d 28 (1976) .

63/  See B r i e f  Amicus Curiae f o r  the NAACP Legal 
Defense and Educational  Fund, I n c . ,  in No. 76- 
8 1 1 ,  R e g e n t s  o f  U n i v e r s i t y  o f  C a l i f o r n i a  v . 
Bakke, pp. 13a-15a.

64/ I d . ,  p . 15a.

6 5 / Guey Heung Lee v .  J o h n so n ,  404 U. S 1215,
1215 -16 (1971 ) .

66/ See, e . g . , Governor ' s  Commission on the Los
Angeles R i o t s ,  V io len ce  in  the C i ty ,  pp. 49 et



-  35

In a d d i t i o n ,  o f  b l a c k  men i n  C a l i f o r n i a

between the ages o f  21 and 29, the age l i m i t s  f o r

e l i g i b i l i t y  to  take the d ispute d  examination,  50%
6 7/was bo rn  i n  the  s o u t h . ---- 'T h e  i n t r a n s i g e n t  r e ­

fu sa l  o f  southern sch o o l  a u t h o r i t i e s  to  comply 

with Brown i s  w e l l  known; vo lu n tary  a c t i o n  was 

r a r e ,  and n o t  u n t i l  a f t e r  A l e x a n d e r  v .  Holmes 

County Board o f  Educat ion , 396 U.S. 19 (1969 ) ,  did 

the f e d e r a l  cou r ts  achieve  meaningful  desegrega­

t i o n  in a s u b s t a n t i a l  number o f  southern sch oo l  

systems. Black students assigned to  b lack  sch oo ls  

in the south s u f f e r e d  not on ly  because o f  segrega­

t i o n  as s u c h ,  but  a l s o  b e c a u s e  b l a c k  s c h o o l s  

prov ided  in o ther  ways as w e l l  an educati on  far  

i n f e r i o r  t o  t h a t  a f f o r d e d  w h i t e s  in  the  same 

s t a t e s  or  elsewhere in the countr y .  In the black  

s ch o o ls  there was g e n e r a l l y  a h igh er  p u p i l - t e a c h e r

66/  Cont1d .

s e q .  ( 1 9 6 5 ) ;  C a l i f o r n i a  L e g i s l a t i v e  Assem bly  
Permanent Subcommittee on Post Secondary Educa­
t i o n ,  Unequal Access to  C o l lege  (1975) .  See a lso  
United States Commission on C i v i l  Rights ,  Mexican- 
American Education Study, Reports I -VI (1971 -74 ) .

67/  U.S. Bureau o f  the Census, 1970 Census o f  
Populat ion ,  Ser ies  PC(2)-2A,  State o f  B ir th ,  p. 
156.



-  3 6

r a t i o  and l o w e r  p e r  c a p i t a  e x p e n d i t u r e s ,  the  

t e a c h e r s  were l e s s  w e l l  t r a i n e d  and had l o w e r  

s a l a r i e s ,  the p h y s i c a l  f a c i l i t i e s  were f r e q u e n t ly

i n f e r i o r ,  and in some cases the academic year was
, „  68 /s h o r t e r .—

We t h i n k  i t  u n l i k e l y  t h a t  in  a d o p t i n g  the 

1866 C i v i l  Rights Act f o r b id d in g  s t a t e  p r a c t i c e s  

which perpetu ate  the e f f e c t  o f  past d i s c r i m i n a t i o n  

Congress intended that the Act would not  p r o t e c t  

an e x - s l a v e  from V i r g i n i a  i f  he moved to  Georg ia .  

Such a d i s t i n c t i o n  would have had the incongruous 

e f f e c t  o f  f o r b id d in g  s t a t e s  to  apply t h e i r  vagrancy 

laws t o  t h e i r  own n a t i v e s ,  but  p e r m i t t i n g  the  

s t a t e s  to  apply those laws to  former s laves  from

68/  State by s t a t e  s t a t i s t i c s  on each o f  these  
f a c t o r s  were set  f o r t h  in the In t e r v e n o r s '  S t a t e ­
ment Of M ate r ia l  Facts As To Which There Is No 
Genuine Issue in New York v .  United S t a t e s , No. 
2419-71, D .D .C . .  Judgment in favor  o f  the i n t e r v e ­
nors in that case ,  which in vo lved  the a p p l i c a ­
b i l i t y  to  c e r t a i n  New York co u n t ie s  o f  the Voting 
Rights Act o f  1965, was af f i rmed  by th is  Court.  
419 U.S. 888 (1974 ) .  Some o f  these s t a t i s t i c s
are reproduced in the Motion o f  P l a i n t i f f s - I n t e r -  
venors To Af f i rm ,  No. 73-1740, pp. la -31a .



-  37 -

o t h e r  s t a t e s . — I t  a l s o  would  have  t e n d e d  t o  

d iscourage  e x - s l a v e s  from moving away from t h e i r  

former masters ,  one o f  the primary goa ls  o f  the 

Black Codes which Congress d e p lo re d .  We t h e r e f o r e  

suggest  that  the 1866 C i v i l  Rights Act f o r b i d s  Los 

Angeles from using  a non j o b - r e l a t e d  t e s t  which 

p e r p e t u a t e s  the e f f e c t  o f  p a s t  d i s c r i m i n a t i o n  

r e g a r d le ss  o f  whether that d i s c r i m i n a t i o n  occurred  

in C a l i f o r n i a  or  some o ther  s t a t e .

6 9 /

69/  General  T e r r y ' s  d e c i s i o n  to  annul the V i r g i ­
n ia  vagrancy laws was premised on the f a c t  that  i t  
would have an adverse impact on freedmen due, not 
to  any past d i s c r i m i n a t i o n  by V i r g i n i a ,  but to 
"wrongful  combinat ions"  by p r iv a t e  employers to 
reduce wages. See n .54 ,  supra . Congressman Windom 
e x p r e s s e d  a s i m i l a r  c o n c e r n  w i t h  such p r i v a t e  
c o n s p i r a c i e s ,  arguing they prov ided a reason f o r  
adopting  the C i v i l  Rights Act and annuling the 
Black Codes. Cong. G l o b e . ,  39th Cong. ,  1st Se s s . ,
p. 1160.



38

CONCLUSION

For the f o r e g o in g  reasons the judgment o f  the 
court  o f  appeals should be a f f i rm ed .

JACK GREENBERG 
0. PETER SHERWOOD 
ERIC SCHNAPPER 

Suite  2030 
10 Columbus C i r c l e  
New York, New York 10019

Counsel f o r  Amicus



ME1LEN PRESS INC. — N. Y. C. 219

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